Travel

This Mexican beach hit a single day with 140 tons of Sargassum

In the middle of what now officially the Worst Sargassum season ever recordedIsla Mujeres stands for an unprecedented environment. This week, over 140 tons Sargassum Waste ashore in one day – intensification the pressure on local cleaning teams and threatened the unspoilt beaches of the island at the peak of summer tourism season.

Watch video:

Source: Facebook Group (Mexico Sargassum seaweed updates (Cancun, PDC, Tulum, etc.))

Mayor Aatenea Gómez ricale praised the heroic efforts of the ZOFEMAT (Federal Maritime Terrestrial Zone) team, who started their work before sunrise and have already removed More than 1,335 tons from Sargassum since the start of the season. “The work that our ZOFEMAT WARRIORS do is really extraordinary,” said the mayor during a site inspection in Playa Norte. “Their dedication is the reason that we can keep our beaches clean and hospitable, even if this crisis escalates.”

The summer of 2025 breaks all records. Scientists and environmental agencies have confirmed that this year the Highest volume Sargassum ever followed About the Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico. Unusually warm ocean temperatures and shifting currents have led huge flowers to float to the west, overwhelming coastal areas in the Mexican Caribbean.


Isla Mujeres, one of the most popular island destinations in Mexico, is in the front line. Municipal officials report that the seaweed arrives unpredictably, making it more difficult to coordinate response tensions. ZOFEMAT teams now lead Three daily monitoring shiftsAnd clean -up plowing is mobilized with minimal notification to tackle sudden intake.

“The Sargassum no longer arrives with a pattern – it comes in waves, at every hour and in overwhelming quantities,” said Dayana Pérez Medina, director of ZoFemat. “That is why we constantly monitor the coast and adjust our activities in real time.”

See also  Spain will be the number 1 country for digital nomads by 2025 – here's why everyone is moving there

Despite the scale of the problem, the island does not support. The local government continues to increase manpower and resources and the mayor has called on the community to participate in the effort. “Keeping Isla Mujeres clean is a shared responsibility,” said Gómez. “It takes a united effort to maintain our beaches, protect our environment and to protect our tourism economy.”

As the crisis continues, Isla Mujeres continues to work for resilience and rapid response but officials recognize that long-term regional coordination, scientific support and stronger action solutions require the root causes of sargassum proliferation.

With record -breaking volumes that are still floating to the coast, the summer of 2025 will be a determining moment in the fight against Sargassum. And Isla Mujeres again leads a good example.

Back to top button